This manual page is for Mac OS X version 10.6.3

If you are running a different version of Mac OS X, view the documentation locally:

  • In Terminal, using the man(1) command

Reading manual pages

Manual pages are intended as a quick reference for people who already understand a technology.

  • For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).

  • For more information about this technology, look for other documentation in the Apple Reference Library.

  • For general information about writing shell scripts, read Shell Scripting Primer.



filetest(3pm)                         Perl Programmers Reference Guide                         filetest(3pm)



NAME
       filetest - Perl pragma to control the filetest permission operators

SYNOPSIS
           $can_perhaps_read = -r "file";      # use the mode bits
           {
               use filetest 'access';          # intuit harder
               $can_really_read = -r "file";
           }
           $can_perhaps_read = -r "file";      # use the mode bits again

DESCRIPTION
       This pragma tells the compiler to change the behaviour of the filetest permission operators, "-r"
       "-w" "-x" "-R" "-W" "-X" (see perlfunc).

       The default behaviour of file test operators is to use the simple mode bits as returned by the stat()
       family of system calls.  However, many operating systems have additional features to define more
       complex access rights, for example ACLs (Access Control Lists).  For such environments, "use
       filetest" may help the permission operators to return results more consistent with other tools.

       The "use filetest" or "no filetest" statements affect file tests defined in their block, up to the
       end of the closest enclosing block (they are lexically block-scoped).

       Currently, only the "access" sub-pragma is implemented.  It enables (or disables) the use of access()
       when available, that is, on most UNIX systems and other POSIX environments.  See details below.

       Consider this carefully

       The stat() mode bits are probably right for most of the files and directories found on your system,
       because few people want to use the additional features offered by access(). But you may encounter
       surprises if your program runs on a system that uses ACLs, since the stat() information won't reflect
       the actual permissions.

       There may be a slight performance decrease in the filetest operations when the filetest pragma is in
       effect, because checking bits is very cheap.

       Also, note that using the file tests for security purposes is a lost cause from the start: there is a
       window open for race conditions (who is to say that the permissions will not change between the test
       and the real operation?).  Therefore if you are serious about security, just try the real operation
       and test for its success - think in terms of atomic operations.  Filetests are more useful for
       filesystem administrative tasks, when you have no need for the content of the elements on disk.

       The "access" sub-pragma

       UNIX and POSIX systems provide an abstract access() operating system call, which should be used to
       query the read, write, and execute rights. This function hides various distinct approaches in
       additional operating system specific security features, like Access Control Lists (ACLs)

       The extended filetest functionality is used by Perl only when the argument of the operators is a
       filename, not when it is a filehandle.

       Limitation with regard to "_"

       Because access() does not invoke stat() (at least not in a way visible to Perl), the stat result
       cache "_" is not set.  This means that the outcome of the following two tests is different.  The
       first has the stat bits of "/etc/passwd" in "_", and in the second case this still contains the bits
       of "/etc".

        { -d '/etc';
          -w '/etc/passwd';
          print -f _ ? 'Yes' : 'No';   # Yes
        }

        { use filetest 'access';
          -d '/etc';
          -w '/etc/passwd';
          print -f _ ? 'Yes' : 'No';   # No
        }

       Of course, unless your OS does not implement access(), in which case the pragma is simply ignored.
       Best not to use "_" at all in a file where the filetest pragma is active!

       As a side effect, as "_" doesn't work, stacked filetest operators ("-f -w $file") won't work either.

       This limitation might be removed in a future version of perl.



perl v5.10.0                                     2007-12-18                                    filetest(3pm)

Reporting Problems

The way to report a problem with this manual page depends on the type of problem:

Content errors
Report errors in the content of this documentation to the Perl project. (See perlbug(1) for submission instructions.)
Bug reports
Report bugs in the functionality of the described tool or API to Apple through Bug Reporter and to the Perl project using perlbug(1).
Formatting problems
Report formatting mistakes in the online version of these pages with the feedback links below.

Did this document help you? Yes It's good, but... Not helpful...